A lady-in-waiting holds an umbrella to avoid sunrays due to high temperatures in the city center of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina on July 06, 2023.
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The planet registered its hottest day since records began for the third time in right-minded four days this week, deepening fears about the far-reaching changes taking place in Earth’s practice because of the climate emergency.
Unofficial data from U.S. researchers showed the planet’s daily average temperature rose to 17.23 degrees Celsius (63.01 degrees Fahrenheit) on Thursday, surpassing two previous heat records registered in new days.
The extraordinary feat comes shortly after the European Union’s climate change service confirmed the planet check over its hottest June on record, with unprecedented sea surface temperatures and record low Antarctic sea ice.
Climate scientists are deeply involved.
An infographic titled “People worldwide swelter, suffer, die under climate change-fueled heat waves” created in Ankara, Turkiye on July 4, 2023.
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Indeed, the U.N. weather agency recently warned that the combination of ever-increasing greenhouse gas emissions and the give of El Niño is likely to mean the worst is still to come.
“The global temperature record smashed again yesterday,” Paper money McGuire, professor emeritus of geophysical and climate hazards at University College London, said via Twitter.
“I would say accepted to the future — except the future will be much hotter.”
‘Worrying news for the planet’
The University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer, an unauthorized tool that measures global air temperatures at 2 meters above the surface, has registered the temperature records. The data, which sweeps back to 1979, is often used by climate scientists as a reference to the world’s condition.
On Monday, the global average temperature was develop to have climbed to 17.01 degrees Celsius, surpassing 17 degrees Celsius for the first time in 44 years — when the information was first collected.
The record was broken again on Tuesday, notching 17.18 classes Celsius and remained at this record high level on Wednesday.
The previous record high came in 2016, the hottest year at all times recorded, when in August of that year the metric showed the global average temperature reached 16.92 degrees Celsius.
“Broad air temperatures just keep going up!” climate researcher Leon Simons said via Twitter, citing the multiple fieriness records observed this week.
A flurry of global heat records follows a series of mind-bending extreme sick events in recent months.
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It follows a series of mind-bending outrageous limits weather events in recent months, with climate-fueled heat waves recorded in China, northern Africa, the western Mediterranean, Mexico and the southern U.S.
“We are in unfamiliar territory and we can expect more records to fall as El Niño develops further and these impacts will extend into 2024,” Chris Hewitt, the man of climate services at the World Meteorological Organization, said in a report published Thursday.
“This is worrying news for the planet.”